Norma McCorvey, Roe Of Landmark 'Roe V. Wade' Ruling On Abortion, Dies At 69
She was not on the list.
Many only know Norma McCorvey by a name that's not hers.
Under the pseudonym Jane Roe, McCorvey became the central
figure of Roe v. Wade, the landmark 1973 Supreme Court ruling that legalized
abortion in the U.S. But in the decades that followed, the complex woman came
to serve as a champion at times for both sides of the deep divide over abortion
rights.
McCorvey died Saturday of heart failure at the age of 69,
according to her daughter Melissa, and Joshua Prager, a journalist who is
writing a book about the court case, says McCorvey died in Katy, Texas.
How McCorvey became Roe
It was her third pregnancy — after Melissa, her eldest, and
another child McCorvey gave up for adoption — that brought McCorvey to the
attention of the lawyers who would eventually take up her case. The 22-year-old
McCorvey, who was then unmarried, had been seeking an abortion but could not
find a doctor in Texas who would perform the procedure, which was then illegal
except when the life of the mother was endangered.
Attorneys Sarah Weddington and Linda Coffee took up
McCorvey's case, and in 1970, they filed the lawsuit that — after several
twists and turns — would ultimately wind up at the Supreme Court. By the time
the ruling was finally passed down in 1973, however, McCorvey had already
carried her pregnancy to term, and had given the child up for adoption.
Though Roe v. Wade may not have changed McCorvey's
particular circumstances, the landmark Supreme Court ruling had a massive
effect on the cultural and political landscape of the United States. The 7-2
decision, which invalidated state bans on abortion in the U.S., may not have
started the long-simmering dispute over the procedure, but it came to be its
central flashpoint in the decades that followed.
As Julie Rovner reported for NPR in 2013 — the decision's
40th anniversary — opinions on the ruling remained as deeply entrenched as the
year it was handed down.
"Over the past two decades, opinion on whether or not
Roe should be overturned has barely changed," Rovner reported at the time,
citing a Pew Research Center poll. "In 1992, 60 percent of those asked
said the court should not overturn the ruling. Today that's up to 63
percent."
The case had no less of an impact later on McCorvey, who was
still just 25 when it ended. She maintained her anonymity for more than a
decade, until setting it aside in the 1980s. At that point, she remained a
staunch defender of abortion rights, "working for a time at a Dallas women's
clinic where abortions were performed," according to The Associated Press.
Yet in the mid-1990s, after the publication of her first
memoir, McCorvey underwent a dramatic conversion — announcing that she had
become a born-again Christian. What's more, she went to work for the
anti-abortion group Operation Rescue, from which position she then championed
against the abortion rights granted by the case that bears her pseudonym.
"I'll be serving the Lord and helping women save their
babies. I will hold a pro-life position for the rest of my life," McCorvey
once said, explaining her conversion. "I think I've always been pro-life.
I just didn't know it."
In an interview with Fresh Air in the '90s, McCorvey looked
back on her experience as Jane Roe.
"I feel like a role model in one sense of the
word," McCorvey said.
"But when people really stop and really sit down and
think about Jane Roe or Norma McCorvey, I feel like any woman who's ever been
denied anything in her whole life is a Jane Roe. Because no woman should have
to suffer all the pain and humiliations and indignities that I've had to
face."
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